Sépcifications
medium: 55 x 75cm (paper size), 37.5 x 50cm (image size) – limited edition of 30 + 2 AP + 1 PP
large: 75 x 110cm (paper size), 60 x 80cm (image size) – limited edition of 20 + 2 AP + 1 PP
master: 90 x 120cm (paper size), 80 x 100cm (image size) – limited edition of 5 + 2 AP + 1 PP
© Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge
© Salto-Ulbeek
Price and edition number on request
info@salto-ulbeek.comERNEST SHACKLETON’S IMPERIAL TRANS-ANTARCTIC (ENDURANCE) EXPEDITION 1914-1917
The photographs of Frank Hurley
The Scott Polar Research Institute collection
Limited Edition of Platinum-Palladium prints
When Ernest Shackleton’s ship, the Endurance, sank in the Weddell Sea after being trapped and crushed by sea ice, his Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition of 1914-1917 turned into one of the greatest survival stories of all time. Documented by the Australian photographer Frank Hurley, it has gone on to inspire historians and the general public for over a century. The approximately two hundred glass plate and celluloid negatives brought back by Hurley from the expedition constitute one of the greatest treasures in the history of human exploration.
For historical reasons, Hurley’s Endurance negatives are divided between the archives of the Scott Polar Research Institute in the University of Cambridge, and of the Royal Geographical Society in London. Whilst the majority of the negatives are the Royal Geographical Society, the Scott Polar Research Institute preserves a small but very qualitative selection. Thanks to an ongoing collaboration between the Institute and Salto Ulbeek Publishers, twenty-six of these have for the first time been printed using the platinum-palladium process. This contributes to securing the material and visual legacy of the Endurance expedition.